News

Download Our Latest International Trade Reports

Stay Updated with the Latest News from the International Trade Council and Our Members

January 1, 2021

Kristan

Since the introduction of Canada’s Bill C-14, the Modern Slavery Act, in June 2020, many retailers and importers have found themselves facing an uncomfortable but necessary reckoning. The bill, though still progressing through the legislative process, has already sent a strong signal: the era of voluntary modern slavery reporting is drawing to a close. For […]

December 28, 2020

Daisy

Brussels, 28 December 2020 – Ambassadors from the 27 EU member states have given their unanimous approval to the EU-UK post-Brexit trade deal, paving the way for it to come into force on 1 January. The UK Parliament is expected to approve it on 30 December.   Under EU rules, it can take effect provisionally, […]

December 15, 2020

Kristan

The signing of the U.S. National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 in December 2020 marked yet another turning point in the government’s approach to supply chain security, particularly for defense-related industries. While supply chain resilience has long been a concern for the Department of Defense, the NDAA 2021 codified new priorities that reflect […]

December 1, 2020

Kristan

The European Union’s Circular Economy Action Plan, first unveiled in March 2020, has quickly become a cornerstone of industrial sustainability policy across the bloc. For manufacturers, particularly those operating within energy-intensive and material-heavy sectors, the Action Plan has introduced not just high-level goals but increasingly detailed expectations for supply chain transparency. One of the most […]

November 1, 2020

Kristan

The passage of Canada’s Bill C-15, more formally known as the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, marked a significant shift in how natural resource firms must navigate supply chain operations. After its Royal Assent in June 2020, the legislative framework began reshaping expectations for corporate conduct in regions intersecting with […]

October 15, 2020

Kristan

The passage of Australia’s Modern Slavery Act in 2018 prompted significant reflection across multiple sectors, but it wasn’t until the first reporting cycles in 2019 that the scale of the challenge became truly clear. Mining firms, manufacturers, retailers—each began grappling, in varying degrees of seriousness, with the Act’s reporting requirements. Yet, for all the initial […]

October 1, 2020

Kristan

When the European Green Deal was formally adopted in July 2020, it marked not just another high-level policy framework, but what many saw as a decisive shift in the EU’s climate and industrial strategies. In the months that followed, as the Green Deal Work Programme took shape, attention turned rapidly to implementation mechanisms—where lofty ambitions […]

September 15, 2020

Daisy

International Trade Council welcomes the decision of the United States to drop the proposed 10% tariff on certain types of Canadian aluminum. The tariff was announced by President Donald Trump just last month, citing a flood of under-priced metal into the country. After determining that imports were likely to decline after an earlier surge, the […]

September 15, 2020

Kristan

The U.K. Companies (Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations 2018, which came into force in September 2019, represented what many policymakers considered a significant, if somewhat understated, step toward greater corporate transparency. While not as headline-grabbing as some of the government’s other corporate governance reforms, these regulations introduced a key requirement: that beneficial ownership information (BOI) for companies […]

September 1, 2020

Kristan

When the U.S. National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2020 was signed into law in December 2019, the broader public attention largely fell on its topline budget allocations and headline procurement programs. Yet beneath these more conspicuous elements, the legislation embedded provisions that arguably carried equal—if not greater—long-term significance for federal contractors. Among […]

August 15, 2020

Kristan

The Extractive Sector Transparency Measures Act (ESTMA), in force since 2015, has by now become a familiar fixture in the compliance landscape of Canada’s mining, oil, and gas industries. But if the legislation’s first years were marked by firms simply finding their feet with its basic requirements, 2020 brought a noticeable shift in both tone […]

August 13, 2020

Daisy

The International Trade Council announces that the European Union has formally adjusted its trade relationship with Cambodia, moving away from its preferential trade programme, the Everything but Arms (EBA) agreement. The decision, resulting from Cambodia’s persisting systemic human rights violations, reinstates custom duties on a significant proportion of Cambodia’s exports to the EU. Under the […]